Prime Minister Theresa May says the spy who compiled an unverified dossier alleging Moscow has compromising evidence on US President-elect Donald Trump has not worked for the British government for years.

Speaking alongside New Zealand PM Bill English at a press conference in Downing Street, May said: "It is absolutely clear that the individual who produced this dossier has not worked for the UK government for years."

Former UKIP leader Nigel Farage had urged May to distance Britain from the memos and make clear the authorities had nothing to do with it.

The Daily Mail reports a spokesman for the PM would not confirm if the government had yet been in contact with Trump's team to reassure them over the dossier.

The spokesman only said: "There is contact between the UK and the president-elect's team about plans for the forthcoming visit," referring to May's planned trip to the US after Trump's inauguration.

Asked whether the government had been aware of the FBI's reported request to talk to Steele about his dossier, the spokesman said: "How the FBI conducts an investigation is a matter for the FBI. It is not commonplace for us to get into specifics."

Earlier this week BuzzFeed published allegations relating to a dossier, reportedly written by Steele, which claims Russia has information on Trump that it is using to blackmail him and that Trump and Moscow have been in contact for years.

The allegations include claims about Trump's "personal obsessions and sexual perversion," including the charge that the billionaire real estate mogul had Russian prostitutes urinate on each other in a Moscow hotel room where the Obamas had stayed during an official visit.

It also alleges Russia has been "cultivating, supporting and assisting" Trump for years.

BuzzFeed has come under fire from many journalists over its decision to publish the report which, by its own admission, is "not just unconfirmed: it includes some clear errors."

Steele, 52, is a director of Orbis Business Intelligence, a London-based company established in 2009 "by former British intelligence professionals."

Trump vehemently denies the allegations. In a press conference on Wednesday, the president-elect called BuzzFeed a "failing pile of garbage" for publishing the document.

Russia has repeatedly denied the accusations, calling them "nonsense," while the White House has refused to provide any concrete evidence to support the allegations, claiming it was necessary to keep it secret in order to protect the sources and methods of the intelligence communities.

Reader Comments

Apparently, a lot of MI6 dirty deeds aren't actually carried out by MI6, they're outsourced in such a manner that the employer never actually gets to meet the employee, or even know who the employee is, much like the customary 'safe' method of hiring a hitman.

Therefore, perhaps Theresa May should have used the phrase "as far as we know" rather than "It is absolutely clear".